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posted by martyb on Saturday October 31 2015, @08:20PM   Printer-friendly
from the international-calls-take-on-a-new-meaning dept.

Twenty years ago today, an invisible object circling an obscure star in the constellation Pegasus overturned everything astronomers knew about planets around other stars. No, the fallout was even bigger than that. The indirect detection of 51 Pegasi b—the first planet ever found around a star similar to the sun—revealed that they had never really known anything to begin with.

At the time, even the most adventurous minds blithely assumed that our solar system was more or less typical, a template for all the others. 51 Peg b threw a big splash of reality in their faces. The newfound world was bizarre, a Jupiter-size world skimming the surface of its star in a blistering-fast "year" that lasted just 4.2 days. Its existence ran counter to the standard theories of how planets form and evolve. It answered one big question: Yes, other planetary systems really do exist. But it raised a thousand others.

How long before we discover signals from one of those planets, and what will it mean for our civilization?


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  • (Score: 2) by takyon on Saturday October 31 2015, @10:51PM

    by takyon (881) <takyonNO@SPAMsoylentnews.org> on Saturday October 31 2015, @10:51PM (#257020) Journal

    It doesn't matter whether we call Pluto a planet, and the Kepler mission is going to have a much bigger legacy than New Horizons.

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